Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Divergent east-west lineages in an Australian fruit fly associated with the Carpentaria basin divide

View through CrossRef
Abstract Bactrocera jarvisi is an endemic Australian fruit fly species (Diptera: Tephritidae). It occurs commonly across tropical and subtropical coastal Australia, from far-northern Western Australia, across the ‘Top End’ of the Northern Territory, and then down the Queensland east coast. Across this range, its distribution crosses several well documented biogeographic barriers. In order to better understand factors leading to the divergence of Australian fruit fly lineages, we carried out a population genetic study of B. jarvisi from across its range using genome-wide SNP analysis, utilising adult specimens gained from trapping and fruit rearing. Populations from the Northern Territory (NT) and Western Australia were genetically similar to each other, but divergent from the genetically uniform east-coast (=Queensland, QLD) population. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the NT population derived from the QLD population. We infer a role for the Carpentaria Basin as a biogeographic barrier restricting east-west gene flow. The QLD populations were largely panmictic and recognised east-coast biogeographic barriers play no part in north-south population structuring. While the NT and QLD populations were genetically distinct, there was evidence for the historically recent translocation of flies from each region to the other. Flies reared from different host fruits collected in the same location showed no genetic divergence. While a role for the Carpentaria Basin as a barrier to gene flow for Australian fruit flies agrees with existing work on the related B. tryoni , the reason(s) for population panmixia for B. jarvisi (and B. tryoni ) over the entire Queensland east coast, a linear north-south distance of >2000km, remains unknown.
Title: Divergent east-west lineages in an Australian fruit fly associated with the Carpentaria basin divide
Description:
Abstract Bactrocera jarvisi is an endemic Australian fruit fly species (Diptera: Tephritidae).
It occurs commonly across tropical and subtropical coastal Australia, from far-northern Western Australia, across the ‘Top End’ of the Northern Territory, and then down the Queensland east coast.
Across this range, its distribution crosses several well documented biogeographic barriers.
In order to better understand factors leading to the divergence of Australian fruit fly lineages, we carried out a population genetic study of B.
jarvisi from across its range using genome-wide SNP analysis, utilising adult specimens gained from trapping and fruit rearing.
Populations from the Northern Territory (NT) and Western Australia were genetically similar to each other, but divergent from the genetically uniform east-coast (=Queensland, QLD) population.
Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the NT population derived from the QLD population.
We infer a role for the Carpentaria Basin as a biogeographic barrier restricting east-west gene flow.
The QLD populations were largely panmictic and recognised east-coast biogeographic barriers play no part in north-south population structuring.
While the NT and QLD populations were genetically distinct, there was evidence for the historically recent translocation of flies from each region to the other.
Flies reared from different host fruits collected in the same location showed no genetic divergence.
While a role for the Carpentaria Basin as a barrier to gene flow for Australian fruit flies agrees with existing work on the related B.
tryoni , the reason(s) for population panmixia for B.
jarvisi (and B.
tryoni ) over the entire Queensland east coast, a linear north-south distance of >2000km, remains unknown.

Related Results

British Food Journal Volume 35 Issue 5 1933
British Food Journal Volume 35 Issue 5 1933
The Fruit Control Act, 1924, is an important one as it provides for the establishment of a Fruit Control Board, and is described as an “Act to make Provision for Control of the Fru...
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
It was always based on a teenage love story between the two kids. One is a sniffer and one is not. It was designed for Central Australia because we do write these kids off there. N...
A new type bionic global optimization: Construction and application of modified fruit fly optimization algorithm
A new type bionic global optimization: Construction and application of modified fruit fly optimization algorithm
Fruit fly optimization algorithm, which is put forward through research on the act of foraging and observing groups of fruit flies, has some merits such as simplified operation, st...
British Food Journal Volume 35 Issue 3 1933
British Food Journal Volume 35 Issue 3 1933
The people of the Union of South Africa have established on a sound and satisfactory basis the beginnings of what we hope and believe will develop in due course into a very great i...
On the Rock-basins in the Granite of the Dartmoor District, Devonshire
On the Rock-basins in the Granite of the Dartmoor District, Devonshire
In this Memoir the origin of Rock-basins in the Granite of Dartmoor and its vicinity is alone considered; and it is not attempted to draw therefrom any law as to the manner of the ...
British Food Journal Volume 33 Issue 10 1931
British Food Journal Volume 33 Issue 10 1931
The preliminary figures for the production of fruit in the United States of America for the year 1930 issued by the Department of Commerce, Washington, are as follows:—Apples, 163,...
The Genetic Mechanism of the Sequence Stratigraphy of the Rift Lacustrine Basin in Jiyang Depression, East China
The Genetic Mechanism of the Sequence Stratigraphy of the Rift Lacustrine Basin in Jiyang Depression, East China
Abstract Through the studies of sequence stratigraphy of early Tertiary in the east part of Jiyang depression, the characteristics of sequence evolution in contin...

Back to Top